Fifty-One Tales - Lord Dunsany

(8 User reviews)   1979
By Gary Greco Posted on Feb 11, 2026
In Category - Rare Collection
Lord Dunsany Lord Dunsany
English
Hey, have you ever wondered what a ghost does on its day off? Or what happens when Death gets lost on the way to an appointment? That's the kind of weird and wonderful world you step into with Lord Dunsany's 'Fifty-One Tales'. This isn't your typical story collection. Forget epic battles and complex heroes. Instead, Dunsany gives us fifty-one tiny windows into a universe where myths are real, gods are petty, and the line between our world and something far stranger is paper-thin. Each tale is a quick shot of pure imagination, often just a page or two, but they pack a surprising punch. One moment you're smiling at the absurdity of a city that bans the moon, and the next you're left with a quiet, haunting feeling about time, memory, or our own fleeting lives. It's like finding a box of forgotten, slightly magical postcards from a world that exists just around the corner. If you're tired of predictable plots and want something that will genuinely make you stop and think (and maybe glance nervously at the shadows), this is your next read.
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Lord Dunsany's Fifty-One Tales is a collection of very short stories, most just a few paragraphs long. They don't follow a single plot or character. Instead, each one is a standalone glimpse into a strange and poetic reality. You might meet a ghost who is terribly bored, a pirate ship sailing through a London suburb, or the last god living in a forgotten garden. The 'conflict' is often philosophical or cosmic: a man argues with the embodiment of Time, a city tries to control nature, or ancient myths bump awkwardly against the modern world.

Why You Should Read It

This book is a masterclass in atmosphere and implication. Dunsany doesn't need five hundred pages to build a world; he does it in five sentences. His prose is simple and clear, but it casts a powerful spell. The magic here isn't in wizards and fireballs, but in the feeling that the ordinary world is resting on top of something much older and weirder. I found myself reading just one or two tales at a time, letting each little parable sit with me. Some are funny, some are sad, and many are beautifully melancholy, asking quiet questions about what we value and what we leave behind.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for daydreamers, poets, and anyone who loves the short stories of authors like Neil Gaiman or Kelly Link. It's for readers who enjoy being surprised and don't always need a neatly wrapped ending. If you like big, fast-paced novels, this might feel too slight. But if you're in the mood for something different—a book of literary snacks that are strangely filling—'Fifty-One Tales' is a hidden gem. Keep it on your nightstand for those moments when you want a complete escape in just five minutes.



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Susan Lopez
7 months ago

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Michael Martin
2 years ago

After spending a few days with this digital edition, the author clearly has a deep mastery of the subject matter. It’s hard to find this much value in a single source these days.

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5 months ago

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Anthony Clark
3 months ago

Recommended.

Elijah Martinez
1 year ago

Honestly, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. Truly inspiring.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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